Telangiectasia Hereditary Hemorrhagic

The name of the disease - telangiectatic hemorrhage - is the result of a complex and rather incomprehensible combination of two words. The underlying disease (telangiectation) apparently comes from the Latin “tela angio” and implies dilation or ectasia of blood vessels. The term "hemorrhage" means hemorrhage and indicates that the dilation of blood vessels is accompanied by rupture of capillaries and the formation of small bruises on the skin. Telangiectania hemorrhagic type is a hereditary skin disease. It is characterized by excessive stretching of the subcutaneous vessels with subsequent disruption of their function and the appearance of an excessive number of blood vessels due to this, causing the formation of pinpoint subcutaneous bruises. The main goal of this study is to analyze the mechanism of occurrence of telangiectenia hereditary hemorrhage, methods of its treatment and complications associated with it.

**Telangiectosis** Telangiectosis, hemorrhagic type, is actually a modification of the underlying disease. It is believed that the main cause of this form of telangoectation is inherited



Telangiectasia is a rare condition characterized by the presence of small dilated blood vessels under the skin. In most cases, vascular hyperplasia is hereditary and is transmitted according to an autosomal dominant type of genetic inheritance. The disease is typical for men; women rarely suffer from it. The initial signs of telangiectasia appear in childhood.

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectation is one of the most serious forms of telangiectasis. It is characterized by increased activity and dilation of small blood vessels.

This form of telangiectosis is characterized by more severe skin damage and can lead to serious consequences, including hemorrhage and coagulopathic phenomena associated with a decrease in the ability of blood to clot. Thus, hereditary hemorrhagic telangioangioplasmic elastoplasmic skin lesions require constant attention and treatment from dermatologists and circulatory specialists